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Bulimia Information and Treatment


Category: Health and Fitness  >>  Alternative

By Juliet Cohen   [ 18/08/2008 ]
 | [ viewed 66 times ] Article word count: 374  

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Bulimia also known bulimia nervosa and type of eating disorder. Bulimia nervosa is characterized by common events of binge eating, from twice a week to multiple times a day. Bulimia is evaluated to affect between 3% of all women in the U.S at several point in their lifetime. About 6% of teen girls and 5% of college-aged females are believed to endure from bulimia. People who have bulimia may spree because food gives them a feeling of relieve. Bulimia is most common in young men and women. People with bulimia are frequently of common or near-normal weight, which makes them dissimilar from people with anorexia.

People with bulimia watch to alternate between eating excessive amounts of food (bingeing), and making themselves sick, or using laxatives (purging), in order to maintain a chosen weight. Some of the most common symptoms of bulimia weakness, fatigue, abdominal pain, and loss of menstrual cycles. There are two sub-types of bulimia nervosa purging and not-purging. Purging bulimia is the more familiar of the two and involves self-induced vomiting and self-induced purging to fastly remove food from the body before it can be ingested. Non-purging bulimia, which occurs in only approximately 6%-8% of cases.

Non-purging bulimia includes excessive exercise or fasting after a spree to offset the caloric intake after eating. Treatment focuses on smashing the binge-purge cycles. Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is the greatest generally form of psychological treatment for bulimia. Antidepressants are frequently used in the treatment of bulimia. Antidepressants or psychiatric medications can also help deal accompanying mental disorders, such as depression or anxiety. Psychotherapy is a common term for a way of treating bulimia by talking about your condition and associated issues with a mental health provider.

Interpersonal therapy also may be effectual for treating bulimia. Interpersonal therapy focuses on your common relationships with any people. The aim is to help your interpersonal abilitys how you associate to others, including family, friends and colleagues. Support groups may also be helpful. It's frequently comforting to talk to other people who have been through the same thing, and who can present understanding and acceptance without blame or guilt. Self-help ways for the treatment of this disorder are frequently overlooked by the medical profession because many professionals are included in them.

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Article tags: bulimia information, bulimia treatment tips, bulimia auses symptoms
 

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